Hi
Can anyone tell me which parts of the scene are used for metering on the old Olympus OM10 cameras? I own 2 of them and an OM20. I gather the OM20 has a centre-weighted system but I can't find what the OM10 uses. Is it the equivalent of matrix metering (to use Nikon speak), thus taking an average of several points, or does it also use centre weighted?
I ask to account for scenarios when, for example, you have a grassy lawn, with green trees all around (so perfect 18% reflectance) but a lady in a white dress right in the middle of the scene is occupying say 35% of the scene. What does the OM10 use to measure reflectance? The white dress in the middle, or the overall scene and then average? And if it uses specific points of the frame, what points?
With my Nikon F5, I'd use centre weighted metering and +1 compensation in such a scenario probably (or I'd trust its very advanced multi-point metering algorithm that the Nikon F5 is famed for and use matrix metering). But I can't do that with the OM10 (but I could with OM20 of course, which has an exposure compensation dial).
Thanks
Can anyone tell me which parts of the scene are used for metering on the old Olympus OM10 cameras? I own 2 of them and an OM20. I gather the OM20 has a centre-weighted system but I can't find what the OM10 uses. Is it the equivalent of matrix metering (to use Nikon speak), thus taking an average of several points, or does it also use centre weighted?
I ask to account for scenarios when, for example, you have a grassy lawn, with green trees all around (so perfect 18% reflectance) but a lady in a white dress right in the middle of the scene is occupying say 35% of the scene. What does the OM10 use to measure reflectance? The white dress in the middle, or the overall scene and then average? And if it uses specific points of the frame, what points?
With my Nikon F5, I'd use centre weighted metering and +1 compensation in such a scenario probably (or I'd trust its very advanced multi-point metering algorithm that the Nikon F5 is famed for and use matrix metering). But I can't do that with the OM10 (but I could with OM20 of course, which has an exposure compensation dial).
Thanks